Index of Memorial Resolutions and Biographical Sketches

In memorializing Irwin "Chet" Lieb,
one commemorates a life that, while relatively brief, was rich.
He served his country as a navy fighter pilot; he served a number
of universities as a professor and administrator; and he served
his profession as a dedicated teacher and productive scholar.

Irwin Chester Lieb was born in Newark, New Jersey, November 9, 1925, and
died in Pasadena, California, May 23, 1992. After beginning his university
studies at MIT, he left school to become a naval aviator. Returning to
his studies after his military service, Lieb earned a BA from Princeton
in 1947, an MA from Cornell in 1949, and a PhD from Yale in 1953. At Yale
he studied with John Smith and Paul Weiss. In the course of his student
career, Lieb received the McCosh Prize in metaphysics from Princeton, a
Morse Fellowship at Yale, and a postdoctoral fellowship from the American
Council of Learned Societies.

Lieb taught at Yale from 1952 to 1959, as an instructor and assistant professor,
and at Connecticut College, where he was professor and department chairman
in the years 1959-1963. He left Connecticut to join the philosophy department
at The University of Texas at Austin in 1963. From 1968 to 1972 he was
chairman of the department. In 1973, he became associate dean of the Graduate
School, and from 1975 to 1979 he was vice-president and dean of graduate
studies. In 1981, Lieb left the University to become provost and vice-president,
as well as University Professor of Philosophy, at the University of Southern
California. During his 18 years at UT Austin, Lieb directed 21 PhD dissertations.
In 1971 he was elected president of the Southwestern Philosophical Society.

Lieb's early studies focused on the philosophy of Charles S. Peirce. His
early publications included several articles on Peirce's philosophy and
a collection of Peirce's letters, Charles S. Peirce's Letters to Lady
Welby, 1953, that he edited. He continued to work on Peirce's philosophy,
and his later publications include a paper on basic concepts in Peirce's
philosophy. In 1961, Lieb edited and contributed an essay to Experience,
Existence and the Good: Essays in Honor of Paul Weiss. In addition
to numerous philosophical articles, hepublished
two books: The
Four Faces of Man: A Philosophical Study of Practice, Reason, Art, and
Religion,
1971, and Past, Present and Future: A Philosophical Essay about Time,
1991. The latter book was a highly-acclaimed work on one of the most difficult
philosophical issuesthe problem of "time," a topic on which
Lieb had published several papers. One commentator referred to the book
as a "classic" and another compared it to Alfred N. Whitehead's Process
and Reality. Lieb was working on two other books, Our Uncertain Universities
and Time and Value, at the time of his death.

Lieb's essay "The Ontological Status of the Laws of Nature," Review
of Metaphysics, vol. 39, 1985, was an attempt to provide an analysis
of the concept of causality and set out a version of an anti-Humean realistic
analysis of causal connections. That type of view is currently a widely
discussed philosophical topic. His work in metaphysics and ontology led
Lieb to raise issues about the connection between logic and ontology in
papers such as "Logic and Reality" and "Logical Constants," both
published in the Review of Metaphysics. Like his teacher Paul Weiss,
a well-known figure on the American scene for many years, Lieb's work focused
on fundamental and classical metaphysical issuestime, substance,
causationas well as on various areas in value theory, especially
on problems about the nature of man and society. His work in the history
of philosophy centered on the pragmatism of Peirce and the process philosophy
of Alfred N. Whitehead. Continuing to work during his terminal illness,
he finished a final paper on Peirce's philosophy shortly before his death.

During his four years as vice president and dean of graduate
studies, Lieb initiated two important awardsone in 1976 for outstanding graduate
teaching and one in 1978 for outstanding dissertations. In cooperation
with the Graduate School of Business, Lieb helped implement "Careers
in Business," in which recent PhD's or those nearing their degrees
in the humanities or behavioral sciences took an intensive summer course
in five areas of business. This effort preceded by 15 years the present
concern about preparation of doctoral students for nonacademic careers.

Lieb's attention to faculty and graduate students' needs was reflected
in his work in 1978 on newly-designed and edited handbooks for faculty
and teaching assistants, which were based on University and UT System regulations.
Lieb also oversaw the internal review of UT doctoral programs, mandated
by the Graduate Assembly in 1973. Later, the Texas Higher Education Coordinating
Board began a review of all doctoral programs in the state using a format
based on the University's internal review.

An active participant in the Association of Graduate Schools of the Association
of American Universities, Lieb served as a member-at-large and brought
the association to Austin for its 1978 meeting. In that year, he was appointed
to the National Commission on Research, an organization established to
examine the relationships between government agencies and universities
involved in research. Lieb was one of the principal authors of the five
volumes produced by the commission on such topics as accountability, review
processes, and research personnel.

Lieb's efforts to bring distinguished Jewish scientists from the then Soviet
Union to teach in the United States brought him international recognition.
In February of 1983, he traveled to the Soviet Union as a member of a two-man
delegation to hand deliver invitations from the University of Southern
California for one-year visiting appointments to seven eminent dissident
Soviet scholars.

A fund, established in Lieb's name, currently provides for an undergraduate
scholarship in philosophy at the The University of Texas at Austin. His
books have been given to the Brogan Reading Room in the Department of Philosophy.